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All Events

Join Crain’s Real Estate insider Kirk Pinho and a group of powerhouse experts as they share perspectives on the future of Detroit’s real estate market, what factors are impacting development in the area and how changes in the market can directly affect your business.

For the first time in a generation, metro Detroit is flush with capital. How can your business to tap into it? And what will it mean for the region when – not if – we have another Recession? Finance NEXT is a look at the future of metro Detroit’s economy and what that means for your business.

Crain’s NEXT: Statewide is a series of thought-leadership events aimed at discovering what’s NEXT across the state of Michigan. The series will look at what’s NEXT in economic development within these four areas of the state: St. Clair County, Grand Rapids, Traverse City and Flint.

Crain’s NEXT: Southeast Michigan is a series of thought-leadership events aimed at discovering what’s NEXT in the region. The series will focus on four key industries: real estate, finance, health care and law.

To celebrate the 25th anniversary of Jewish Senior Life’s Program for Holocaust Survivors and Families (PHSF), a Concert of Hope & Unity will honor Dr. Charles Silow, founder and director of the program, for 25 years of service to Holocaust survivors.

A series of open dialogues around contemporary visual art, performance, and identity offered by the U-M Institute for the Humanities and UMS. Discussions will be hosted by Detroit-based performance artist and U-M alumna Jennifer Harge and by art critic, curator, and co-founder of ARTS.BLACK Taylor Renee Aldridge. Harge, Aldridge, and a panel of discussants will attend performances from the UMS season, as well as exhibitions at the U-M Institute for the Humanities. In open discussions, they will

U-M faculty member and Institute for the Humanities fellow Anita Gonzales interviews UMS artist-in-residence Jillian Walker about her research for a new play called "Tignon," inspired by a late-18th century law in New Orleans that required women of color to wear a covering-called a tignon-on their heads to hide their hair.